Daily Mail

Harry won’t let you in... so the Mail will!

It’s the tiny Windsor Castle chapel the public never see – and where little Archie will be christened today. Take your seat for a private tour of its fascinatin­g secrets

- by Robert Hardman

Standing at opposite ends of Windsor Castle, they are two places of worship which could hardly be more different. in the Lower Ward stands one of the most famous churches in the world: St george’s Chapel, gothic medieval masterpiec­e, spiritual home of England’s patron saint and resting place of sovereigns.

it was there, just over a year ago, the duke and duchess of Sussex took their vows in front of the Queen, 600 guests and an estimated global audience in excess of one billion people.

today, though, the couple will head for the Upper Ward and Windsor’s other house of god for the christenin­g of their son, archie, by the archbishop of Canterbury, behind firmly closed doors.

the ceremony will take place in front of just a handful of close family and friends in a chapel which few outsiders have ever seen.

For the Private Chapel, as its name suggests, is not on the tourist trail. it is a royal inner sanctum so intimate that it seats just a dozen worshipper­s (though a few extra seats may be added today). When the Queen wants to commune with the almighty alone, this is where she comes.

Like every part of this great norman fortress, the chapel has a fascinatin­g history, except, in this case, it is a surprising­ly short one.

despite the 16th- century masterpiec­e hanging over the altar and the knight in shining

armour peering down from a pedestal, this room dates back a mere 27 years — and the duke of Edinburgh’s imprint is all over it.

For until 1992, this was a passageway between the public and private parts of the castle. the original Private Chapel was just round the corner.

But all that changed on november 20, 1992, one of the darker days in Windsor Castle’s 1,000-year history.

it was in the chapel that an overheated lamp set fire to a curtain. it caused an inferno which raged day and night through some of the oldest and most important rooms in Britain, illuminati­ng the night sky for miles around.

Coming on the back of various royal marital woes, it was the final straw for the Queen who shortly afterwards called 1992 her ‘ annus horribilis’.

Windsor would be reborn, though, even more stately than before. it was the duke of Edinburgh, supported by the Prince of Wales, who oversaw the five-year £36.5 million restoratio­n. Britain’s finest craftsmen and women were commission­ed to help rebuild the great apartments, including the most important room, mighty St george’s Hall with its hammerbeam roof made from 70 oaks. But perhaps the most radical redesign was the Private Chapel, where the Royal Family gather today.

Few mourned the loss of the old Private Chapel in the blaze. it had been a rather severe and gloomy Victorian space where Prince Charles liked to sneak in as a boy and deliver sermons to imaginary congregati­ons.

in the Seventies it had been done up in golds and yellows by Sir Hugh Casson, the interior designer responsibl­e for the Royal Yacht Britannia’s decor, but remained what one architectu­ral historian called ‘an ungainly elbow between the Private apartments and the State apartments’.

the duke of Edinburgh and his restoratio­n committee decided to switch things around in this corner of the castle.

the old chapel would be transforme­d into a new passage linking public and private quarters.

NOW called the Lantern Lobby, it has a plaque marking the spot where the fire had started. the old passage, meanwhile, would become the new chapel.

giles downes, the architect behind the restoratio­n, was asked to come up with designs.

the art critic Brian Sewell delivered a typically sulphurous verdict. ‘ the chapel is to be a dinky little thing which could as well serve the purpose of a cheap italian restaurant,’ he sniffed, adding that it was ‘ meagre in its scale and wretched in its feeble detail’.

the result, however, was a stunning timber umbrella of soaring, curving oak ribs which adam nicolson, the official historian of the castle restoratio­n, has called an ‘extraordin­ary, continuous and closely moulded net of tracery’. it is certainly a very intricate ceiling for a rather small room.

the chapel has no pews. instead, it is filled with chunky giltwood

chairs which were originally commission­ed by George IV for the State Dining Room and then rejected for being too heavy. Nearly two centuries later, they have found their role.

The new chapel needed a new altar (the old one having been incinerate­d) and the Queen’s furniture-making nephew, Viscount Linley, was invited to build it.

The altarpiece hanging above it is Berto di Giovanni’s Virgin And Child Enthroned. Painted in Perugia, central Italy, while the Tudors reigned in England, it entered royal ownership in the 19th century when it was acquired by Queen Victoria.

Its vision of baby Jesus clasping the Virgin’s thumb is certainly an appropriat­e one for a baptism. Yet this chapel has no font.

So, the Sussexes will borrow the Lily Font from the Jewel House at the Tower of London. Made of silver gilt, it was commission­ed by Queen Victoria for the baptism of her first child in 1841. Adorned with three cherubs, it looks like a giant punch bowl and has been used at most royal christenin­gs ever since.

Most striking, however, is the great stained glass window which dominates and illuminate­s this chapel.

The six-part design was sketched by Prince Philip. He wanted the lower panels to show the wreckage of the fire either side of the dragon — representi­ng evil — being slain by St George.

The upper section would show a sunlit Windsor Castle rising from the ashes, with the Holy Trinity looking down approvingl­y from on high.

The Duke handed his very detailed sketch to glass designer Joseph Nuttgens who brought it to life in dazzling detail. On the bottom right, we see Windsor Castle’s Brunswick Tower bursting into flames while a fireman tries to bring it under control.

ON THE left, a workman rescues a portrait from the wreckage. It is of Sir Jeffrey Wyatville, the Georgian architect who remodelled much of Windsor Castle and is buried there.

This panel is a reminder of the human chain which saved so many works of art. It was one of the minor victories from the 1992 fire (the Duke of York was one of those involved). Nearly all the Windsor artwork was saved.

However, there was one treasure too big and too heavy to move before the rafters came crashing down in the Grand Reception Room.

Note that big green pot in the lower left window. It is the two-ton malachite urn — 5ft wide and taller than a man — which Tsar Nicholas I gave Queen Victoria in 1841. It wouldn’t budge.

In the centre, St George is slaying the dragon as it breathes its last flame. Up above, all is sweetness, light and resurrecti­on.

The Duke is modest about his contributi­on. In 2005, he showed me round Windsor for The Queen’s Castle, a BBC documentar­y which I was writing.

He was happy to show me the chapel, but was reluctant to take the credit. I compliment­ed him on his stained glass window and he quickly replied: ‘It’s not mine.’

Eventually, though, he accepted that it sort of was. ‘Well, I suggested the general idea, yes,’ he admitted. ‘ The idea was that the bottom was the fire and firefighte­rs. We thought we’d put in a portrait of Wyatville, who’d been architect here, and the idea was the smoke would turn into trees and show the castle remerging in the sunlight.’

The chapel also includes one figure salvaged from wreckage of the old — the statuette of a knight in armour. ‘That’s St Michael up there,’ the Duke explained with a chuckle. ‘He lost his arm. He was the only survivor. We thought we’d leave him the way he was but he looked a little uncomforta­ble without any arms!’ So St Michael was given new limbs.

This chapel is a gem, a reminder of the way that the British monarchy has reinvented and rejuvenate­d itself over the centuries.

It is just a pity that the man who has played such a key role in its creation will not be there this morning.

The Queen and Prince Philip have prior commitment­s in Norfolk.

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 ??  ?? Risen from the ashes: The Private Chapel and (top left) the fire at Windsor in 1992. Inset: A stained glass window depicts a fireman battling the flames, left, and, above, the rescue of a portrait of the Georgian architect who remodelled the castle
Risen from the ashes: The Private Chapel and (top left) the fire at Windsor in 1992. Inset: A stained glass window depicts a fireman battling the flames, left, and, above, the rescue of a portrait of the Georgian architect who remodelled the castle
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